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Deep Jungle
Deep Jungle
Nov 18, 2024 5:38 AM

Author:Fred Pearce

Deep Jungle

DEEP JUNGLE is an exploration of the most alien and feared habitat on Earth. Starting with man's earliest recorded adventures, Fred Pearce journeys high into the canopy - home to two-thirds of all the creatures on our planet, many of whom never come down to earth. During his travels he encounters all manner of fantastic flora and fauna, including a frog that can glide from tree to tree, a spider that can drag live chickens into its burrow and a flower that smells of decaying flesh.

It is in the jungle that Pearce discovers secrets about how evolution works, the intricate links that connect us all, and maybe even clues to where humans came from - here is the key to our future foods and medicines, our climate and our understanding of how life works. At the start of a new millennium Pearce asks why we continue to waste precious time - and billions of dollars - looking for signs of life elsewhere in our universe when the greatest range of life-forms that have ever existed lies right here on our doorstep. Today environmentalists say we are on the verge of destroying the last rainforests, and with them the planet's evolutionary crucible, and maybe even its ability to maintain life on Earth. But nature has a way of getting its own back. The Mayans and the people of Angkor went too far in manipulating nature and paid the ultimate price. Their civilisations died and the jungle returned. Nature reclaimed it's own and it may do so again ...

Reviews

...a fascinating piece of work. It contains a wealth of facts, legend and argument that should be of interest to anyone with any curiosity about the history and future of the planet

—— The Sunday Tribune

This is a fascinating exploration of the Earth's most alien, feared and fecund habitat...Pearce produces a cornucopia of wonderful facts and seeks to distinguish between the reality and myths surrounding the heart and lungs of our planet.

—— Carla McKay , Daily Mail

Pearce proves himself a skilful guide to the history and science of the "most extreme, the most complex place on Earth".

—— PD Smith , Guardian

Fortunately, Fred Pearce's flights of rhetorical hyperbole are rare, his tone being one of genial enthusiasm mixed with discreet, but genuine, awe...This is more than a catalogue of curiosities...and Pearce does not shy from the daunting question of what the forests should be for.

—— The Observer

Ngugi has returned to his roots to produce something delicate, fresh and scrupulously honest

—— Michela Wrong , The Spectator

The surprise about Dreams in a Time of War is that, for all the provocation of history, and for all its clear-eyed evocation of an agonised time, it is not an angry book ... Ngugi's storyteller's instinct for character and place, for recurring motifs and telling symbols, triumphs over the bleakness of background...this memoir is a tale of triumph

—— Mary Crockett , The Scotsman

Essential reading for the author's many admirers

—— Michael Holman , Literary Review

Ngugi's storytelling skills never falter as he brings this far-away world vividly to life

—— Metro

Absorbing personal reflections that illuminate not just later careers, but the state of their peoples too.

—— Boyd Tonkin , Independent, Christmas round up

One of Kenya's greatest storytellers

—— James Urquhart , Financial Times

A wonderfully clear-sighted perspective on progress, past and future, which is essential to tackling today's big challenges - potentially catastrophic climate change and inequality

—— Diane Coyle, former Vice Chair of the BBC Trust, author of Cogs and Monsters

Big Science at its best ... Galor's erudition and creativity are remarkable

—— Prof. Steven N. Durlauf, University of Chicago, on Unified Growth Theory

An engaging and optimistic answer to anyone who thinks that poverty and inequality will always be with us

—— Ian Morris, author of Why the West Rules – For Now

Galor's project is breathtakingly ambitious

—— Robert Solow, Nobel Laureate in Economics

A magisterial account of the evolution of human civilization from its prehistoric origins into the present day. It's a page-turner, a suspense-filled thriller full of surprises, mind-bending puzzles and profound insights

—— Glenn C. Loury, author of The Anatomy of Racial Inequality

In lucid, accessible prose, Galor ingeniously traces obscure influences over centuries ... This engrossing history reveals that subtle causes can have astounding effects

—— Publishers Weekly

A tour de force. This deeply argued book brilliantly weaves the threads of global economic history to deconstruct the rich tapestry that is the modern world

—— Dani Rodrik, author of Straight Talk on Trade

One of the hottest books of the year ahead

—— Irish Independent

Reading Oded Galor's upbeat book I...[was] taken aback by his imagination and verve... great sections of Galor's book are to be applauded... his optimism about humanity shines through

—— Observer

The Journey of Humanity is a good summary of growth theories and is an elegantly written and accessible book

—— Irish Times

Galor argues that climate policy should not be restricted to cutting carbon but should also involve "pushing hard for gender equality, access to education and the availability of contraceptives, to drive forward the decline in fertility". India will do well to heed that advice

—— New Indian Express

The Journey of Humanity stretches from the emergence of Homo sapiens to the present day, and has a lot to say about the future, too. In just over 240 pages it covers our migration out of Africa, the development of agriculture, the Industrial Revolution and the phenomenal growth of the past two centuries. It takes in population change, the climate crisis and global inequality ... There will be inevitable comparisons with Yuval Noah Harari's Sapiens ... If you need an evidence-based antidote to doomscrolling, here it is ... Galor builds his case meticulously, always testing his assumptions against the evidence, and without the sense of agenda-pushing that accompanies other boosterish thinkers - the Steven Pinkers or Francis Fukuyamas of this world

—— Guardian

Incredibly wide-ranging and detailed historical and even anthropological examination of the myriad factors that have brought success and failure to nations ... Lively and learned

—— Tim Hazledine, Emeritus Professor of Economics, University of Auckland , Inerest.co.nz

An optimist's guide to the future ... Oded Galor's 'Sapiens'-like history of civilisation predicts a happy ending for humanity

—— Guardian

Enjoyable and intriguing

—— Steven Poole , Guardian

An antidote to doomscrolling

—— Guardian, *Summer Reads of 2022*

A great historical fresco

—— Le Monde

Breathtaking. A new Sapiens

—— L'Express

Ambitious and deep ... the product of genuine scholarship

—— Jason Furman, economics professor at Harvard, former advisor to Barack Obama , #1 Best Economics Book of 2022, FiveBooks.com
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